Another 6 colleagues join The Squad today, bringing its numbers to 170.That's 170 cops and ex-cops (and some PIs) who have taken to writing crime fiction. You won't get more realistic crime tales than those from this Squad!

​And a huge thanks to Phil Stewart (in Canada, I think) who again has found new members for The Squad. The first 5 joining today are all from Phil's contribution. Thanks, mate!​We have joining us today:1. Ron Crouch - served as a police officer in both the UK and Canada, where he has remained (so I'm counting him as a Canadian). A couple of crime fiction novels, and he writes in other genres.2. James Heneghan - also served as a police office in Liverpool in the UK, before moving to Canada and serving as an officer in Vancouver. He also remains in Canada, so is counted for that country. He writes in various genres, including crime fiction.3. J. Mark Collins - still a serving officer with the Cobourg Police in Canada. One crime fiction novel so far.4. Mark A. Di Giacomo - served in the USA with the New York State Police, the NYPD, and the FBI. Three crime fiction novels so far.5. Jeff Dosser - served with the Tulsa PD in the USA. Mainly writes horror, but some crime/horror blends.6. Larry Darter - served as a police officer for 20 years in both Oklahoma and Texas in the USA. Several crime fiction novels to date.

I'll keep adding more as I come across them, and if you know of any others please feel free to drop me a line.

Check out The Squad:Also: Cops Writing Crime​And please remember, my list is only for CRIME FICTION - not all the true crime and/or memoir writing by cops and ex-cops that's out there (as good as so much of that is).​​Cheers,ABP

Another 9 colleagues join The Squad today, swelling its numbers to 164.That's 164 cops and ex-cops (and some PIs) who have taken to writing crime fiction. You won't get more realistic crime tales than those from this Squad!​We have joining us today:1. Dennis Banahan - served over 30 years with the Chicago PD, and has written two crime novels so far.2. Wayne Zurl - served with the Suffolk County PD. He has written several crime novels.3. George D. Shuman - served as an officer in Washington DC, and has written several crime novels.4. Jason E. Fort - still a serving officer, I believe in South Carolina. A number of novels to his name.5. Gerald Petievich - one of our "related cop" cousins, he served in the US Secret Service. He has written several crime novels, and has had some turned into movies.6. Marc Goodman - served as a police officer (unsure where in the US) and with the FBI. I found one crime novel by him, but he writes in other genres as well.​7. Merle Temple - served as a deputy sheriff (not sure where) and with the Bureau of Narcotics in the US. He has written several crime novels, and he writes in other genres.8. Micki Browning - served with the Durango PD in Colorado. She has written several crime novels.9. Peter Ritchie - our only non-American cousin in this Squad update, he served with the police in Scotland and in London, as well as Europol. He has written a number of crime novels.

I'll keep adding more as I come across them, and if you know of any others please feel free to drop me a line.

Check out The Squad:Also: Cops Writing Crime​And please remember, my list is only for CRIME FICTION - not all the true crime and/or memoir writing by cops and ex-cops that's out there (as good as so much of that is).​​Cheers,ABP

Just a blog to showcase this superb photograph of my Harry books. And isn't Harry well and truly in his element here? Gun, booze, smokes, cuffs. Just needs a naked lady to round it out. This could easily be Harry's desk, but it's not Sydney, rather over the other side of the Pacific Ocean.American crime writer, and fellow Switchblade veteran, Danny Sophabmisay, won the Harry books in the recent competition I ran in conjunction with Switchblade.And he paid me back with this truly fantastic picture - Danny, you're a champion, mate.I just love it, and so had to share it with you all. I've added it to the "Works" page on my website as well.Now I just hope Danny enjoys the books!Cheers,ABP

Heading up to the Hunter Valley for a morning in June and chatting with the good folk of Cessnock. Last time I visited we had a big crowd there, so hoping I created a good enough impression that they all want to listen to me again!

Last week I had the great pleasure of attending Ashley Kalagian Blunt's book launch of My Name is Revenge, at the Acre Eatery in Camperdown (great venue, by the way).I'd met Ashley before through Writing NSW, and she joined us at the launch of Harry's Quest back in January.Ashley signed my copy of My Name is Revenge with "From one crime author to another, best wishes." And her debut novella is indeed a crime story, albeit with a very different angle.It's based on true events - the assassination of the Turkish consul in Sydney in 1980 - but within a fictional narrative. The novella is followed by some of Ashley's essays, all connected to the subject of the Armenian Genocide in 1915-1917. This tragic chapter in the history of the Armenian people is not really well known, despite having the dubious honour of being the first modern genocide. It is also officially denied by the Turkish regime, although they are hardly known for progressive values such as truth and liberty.I'm going to be very interested to learn more about the Armenian Genocide through Ashley's writing, and getting to savour a new crime story at the same time. I'll post a book review in due course.

Woo hoo!Tickets now booked and paid for.My first visit to the U.S.A. and I'm going to be joining an amazing lineup of fellow Switchblade authors for a reading at Skylight Books in Los Angeles on 28 June.I'm also firming up to appear at the Noir at the Bar evening organised by Eric Beetner on 07 July.I can't even begin to describe how exciting this is for me. All these indie noir authors whom I've read with such enjoyment - and now I'm going to meet a whole lot of them.Yeah, that is well worth the 15-hour flight across the Pacific!And I'll be packing every spare bit of space in my luggage (and my partner's luggage) with copies of Harry's World and Harry's Quest.​Cheers,ABP

From the ranks of my Cops Writing Crime Squad comes the debut novel from fellow Aussie ex-cop, Greg James.​I added Greg to the Squad a while back, knowing he was well on the way to his first novel, and having had the honour of reading an earlier manuscript.​We come from different Australian police forces, but we share an awful lot. Not the least of which is we both now write crime fiction. And we both want to tell stories about what we experienced. ​See Greg's website.Bordertown hit the shelves last month and I was thrilled to travel up to Queensland to join Greg for his book launch. And as a bonus I met Australian country music artist Kevin Sullivan, also an ex-cop, performing at the launch before heading off to Nashville to do some recording. See Kevin's website.​I am very much looking forward to reading the final version of Bordertown, and I'll be blogging my review in due course.​What I can tell you from my read of the manuscript is that this is cop realism at its very best: the cops, the local community, the social dynamics, the environment. This is cop writing you can taste, smell, feel, and picture yourself there. But then wish you couldn't. Its that good, that visceral.Grab yourself a copy.Cheers,ABP

I've been sampling the crime and noir offerings published by Fahrenheit Press, and All Things Violent by Nikki Dolson is one of a bunch of Fahrenheit titles I bought late last year.I thoroughly enjoyed this novella from Dolson, whose female protagonist, Laura Park, goes through a brutal journey into a career as a hired killer. I do love a really tough female protagonist (thinking writers like Christa Faust) and Dolson delivers a very fine tough character. Naturally, the disappointments Laura faces from men become a driving force for her, but there is a well-balanced mixture of emotions played out here. For me, this adds to the dark realism of the narrative. Dolson's prose is crisp and direct, and she makes great use of sensory images, especially taste and smell. The first person narrative does much to strengthen the impression of Laura and, given this is a story about her, nothing is lost by using her POV alone. We get all we need of the other characters from their actions and the dialogue. I certainly found myself urging Laura on, and I'd be keen to read any follow on stories.A good, solid piece of noir. I recommend it, and I'll be coming back for more of Dolson's work.Cheers,ABP

I always love reading crime fiction from those fellow ex-cops from my Cops Writing Crime project - The Squad, as I've named us.My normal crime reading is down the hard-boiled and noir avenues (and all those glorious gutters of depravity!), but I do love police procedurals from fellow ex-cops (at least all the ones I've read so far). Having walked those streets in those boots, there's something that reaches out viscerally, I find. And so I do occasionally venture from one variety of mean streets to another - a bit of variety in my genre sex life!

​I actually read this debut novel from Canadian author Desmond P. Ryan at the end of last year, but I'm a tad behind in my book reviews. Apologies.Ryan is a former long-serving Toronto detective, and his debut novel, 10-33 Assist PC, is a superb police procedural just basting in the realism that one hopes to get from ex-cops writing crime fiction.All of the brush strokes of police life are here, as we follow the protagonist, Det. Mike O'Shea, through the underbelly of Toronto, doing his best to take down a prostitution ring of enslaved girls. We have the police partner with the annoying habits, the glimpses of family life and its second place to "the job" (my Aussie slang, there), the obsession with getting a result, the conflict with those cops not equally sharing the passion, the internal police politics and petty rivalries and oneupmanship, the ensuing clusterfucks (if you thought police departments were well-oiled machines, they're usually not, and Ryan nails this aspect), and the tragic end results. ​Never any spoilers from me on the story - if you love police procedurals, then I strongly recommend you read it.​Ryan's realism evoked many memories for me, and I've been out of the cops for 20 years now. But so much came rushing back, especially as I worked vice, and this is the litmus test for me when I'm looking for realism in crime writing about police work. If those memories come flooding back (some of them unwelcome, I have to say), then I know the author has done a very fine job.Take a bow, Mr Ryan, you're off to a flying start as a crime author.And I've just gone online this afternoon to buy your next. Looking forward to the epilogue to this novel, and the next novel.Cheers,ABPP.S. You can check out the Cops Writing Crime here - The Squad.

I love, that's LOVE, the English language - so much sheer vocabulary, delightful irregularities, variety and nuance; and then there are all the regional versions in the wide spread of English-speaking countries around the world.Down here, that's "down under" here, we have our own little quirks: Australian words and phrases that a visitor from another English-speaking land hears and says, "WTF does that mean?!!!" Of course, all our cousins around the globe have their own gems, but here are some Aussie colloquialisms as used in the Harry novels, Harry's World and Harry's Quest. These all appear in the "Glossary" section in both books, but I've culled the lists to leave the particularly Aussie stuff. I concede a few may also be colloquial elsewhere. And some of them are definitely local police slang.Enjoy.

I’m happy to shout from the rooftops that I love Alec Cizak’s work, and this latest masterpiece of hard-boiled noir is incontrovertible proof that he is at the top of his game.We met the female protagonist, Chelsea Farmer, in the excellent Down on the Street, where you could be forgiven for thinking young Chelsea had had it pretty much as bad as it gets – used, abused, and exploited by every man in her life, and derided by other women. But, of course, life can always get worse – the best noir thrives on downfall and tragedy. Without giving anything away, by the time we meet Chelsea again in this novel, she’s tumbled down the tunnel from sexual exploitation to chronic drug addiction. Sadly this is so often the trajectory from what I’ve seen in my professional life. And Chelsea is hanging out with the bottom rung – anarchically violent robberies paying for all the drugs. She’s in her version of Hell.But Chelsea’s got innate verve and courage hiding in the haze of opiates. She grabs for some higher rungs, or what the righteous types in society (namely the power Establishment) dictate as the ladder. The façades of modern society are laid bare by Cizak in his true manner: caustic, penetrating, and brutally honest, but with palpable empathy for the genuine human beings out there, as flawed as they (we) all are. It’s the “American Nightmare” in Cizak’s words. All the sacred cows of societal hypocrisy and the Establishment’s “respectable values” are rounded up, slaughtered, and then barbecued. How’s this for a great quote: “Surrounded by mansions, by people who’d landed in the good dimension, the one where they had enough useless shit around them to convince them their lives had meaning.” And as for the political zeitgeist, Cizak captures the crisis of western liberal democracy perfectly: “Every four years the same two parties ran miserable, rotten candidates, and people wasted their time going to the polls to pretend they had any say in who ran the country.” He’s talking about the USA, but, hell, sounds to me just like Australia as well. And, no doubt, most of our comparable countries. A tragedy in itself.Cizak’s writing is the perfect weaving of story with social commentary, and he deserves a place amongst the great writers of socially incisive fiction. Aside from riotously entertaining storylines and richly drawn characters, Cizak’s work makes you read and think, then re-read and think a whole lot more. Not to mention the regular punches in the guts. I cannot recommend Breaking Glass highly enough. And when you’ve savoured it, go back for his other works. I’ve done that and read them all, for now. I’m just quietly willing Mr Cizak on with his next project – but I’m a patient man, especially when something is so worth the wait.Cheers,ABP

Another 5 colleagues join The Squad today, and it's an all-American day.Many thanks to Jonathan Zeitlin (the first new member today) for reaching out online - always great to touch base with a fellow "cop writing crime". Great to have you on the team, Jonathan.

So, today The Squad grows to 155 cops and ex-cops (and some PIs) who have taken to writing crime fiction. You won't get more realistic crime tales than those from this Squad!​We have joining us today:1. Jonathan B. Zeitlin - former police officer in Cobb County PD, Georgia, and now a serving FBI Agent, with a couple of crime novels so far.2. William J. Caunitz (deceased 1996) - served for 30 years with the NYPD and wrote numerous crime novels.3. Steve Armstrong - served with the Petersburg Bureau of Police, Virginia. He has written a number of crime novels.4. Mark Bouton - served for 30 years with the FBI. He has written several crime novels.5. Lee Kohn - served with the Mobile PD in Alabama, and has written several crime novels.

I'll keep adding more as I come across them, and if you know of any others please feel free to drop me a line.

Check out The Squad:Also: Cops Writing Crime​And please remember, my list is only for CRIME FICTION - not all the true crime and/or memoir writing by cops and ex-cops that's out there (as good as so much of that is).​​Cheers,ABP

I've read some of the other "(Insert city) Noir" series over the last few years, so was keen to see the very recent offering from my own city (current home, at least), especially being a writer of hard-boiled and noir crime myself.So, this is an eclectic collection - some well-known names on the crime writing scene here, others I'd never heard of, in the crime genre anyway. Overall, the writing is good quality and the book is an entertaining read. Being a local here in Sydney, many of the stories definitely conjure up the local scene and feel pretty well. I enjoyed all the stories, without exception, although some resonated more with me than others. My stand outs are those by Mark Dapin and Leigh Redhead. There are certainly some beautifully drawn characters in various of the tales, and there are some lovely twists, as one would hope for from a "noir" label.My only reservation is one of personal taste - I like my noir reading to be gut-punchingly dark and with little regard for sensitivities. I like controversy, discomfort, and brutal rawness. For me, this collection erred towards the tamer side of noir - I didn't come across pages which leapt out and smacked me in the face, unlike the hard-core noir I'm used to reading from Americans (and some Brits). This is very much a personal opinion, but I tend to find Australian fiction these days does seem to be preoccupied with not causing offence or upset. I guess that may be the result of this country's obsession with political correctness. And that's something which, in my view, is incompatible with the harder side of noir.However, that said, if you're happy with your noir on the tamer side, then you'll probably find this a 5-star read. The storytelling is solid, after all.Cheers,ABP

I'm working my way through the swag of new potential members for The Squad, so here's another 5 colleagues joining us today - 4 Americans and 1 Australian.This now takes us to 150 in number, with our 5 new members.That's 150 cops and ex-cops (and some PIs) who have taken to writing crime fiction. You won't get more realistic crime tales than those from this Squad!​So, we have joining us today:1. Art Adkins - served a long career with the LAPD and then the Gainesville PD in the US. Two crime novels I could find, plus non-fiction works.​2. Theresa Handrahan - a serving Federal Law Officer/Customs Officer with Homeland Security in the US. One crime novel I could find reference to.3. Nelson Andreu - serving as the Chief of Police in the West Miami PD, following a long career with the Miami PD. One crime novel I could find.4. Roger Bray - British-born and ex-Royal Navy, but emigrated to Australia and served with both the Australian Federal Police and the Queensland Police. Three crime novels so far.5. John M. Coyle - served a long career with the LAPD and the FBI is the US. One crime novel I could find.

I'll keep adding more as I come across them, and if you know of any others please feel free to drop me a line.

Check out The Squad:Also: Cops Writing Crime​And please remember, my list is only for CRIME FICTION - not all the true crime and/or memoir writing by cops and ex-cops that's out there (as good as so much of that is).​​Cheers,ABP